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> The Beatles rate 2024, Full results on page 18
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JulianT
post 5th May 2024, 05:21 PM
Post #221
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24th: 381 points
Twist And Shout




2010 download chart run: {48}-69->2

steve201 48
ben08 47
Roba. 44
danG 42
…ready for it 38
jimwatts 33
Severin 31
WhoOdyssey 25
popchartfreak 24
gooddelta 24
Bjork 23
Notorious D.O.T. 2
Jade 0
Chez Wombat 0
King Rollo 0
dandy* 0
JulianT 0
Brer 0

Other than “Baby It’s You” this is the only cover version in the rate. It was written in 1961 and the most notable prior version is by the Isley Brothers. A later version by Brian Poole And The Tremeloes reached #4 in the UK in 1963. The Beatles version wasn’t a UK single but reached #2 in the US.

The track was recorded at the end of the “Please Please Me” sessions and is notable for John’s incredibly hoarse voice. He was ashamed of the performance at the time but his version has come to be regarded as the definitive version of one of the greatest early rock ‘n’ roll songs.

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JulianT
post 5th May 2024, 10:01 PM
Post #222
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23rd: 382 points
I Want To Hold Your Hand




Chart run: 10-{1}-1-1-1-1-2-3-6-7-15-15-17-25-24-25-32-42-40-48-50-48R(3)->22

ben08 48
…ready for it 43
Bjork 39
Severin 37
steve201 30
Chez Wombat 29
gooddelta 29
jimwatts 26
Roba. 23
WhoOdyssey 23
dandy* 16
King Rollo 15
JulianT 14
popchartfreak 10
Jade 0
danG 0
Notorious D.O.T. 0
Brer 0

This is their 2nd biggest pure seller and one of the 20 biggest ever in the UK with more than 1.8 million sales. It was their first Billboard #1 and the first of their UK Christmas #1. The song was very much a joint writing effort by John and Paul, and their first song to use multi-track recording.

Here this is the highest placed song before “A Hard Day’s Night”, meaning all the early material is now out. There are now also several other voters joining gooddelta in having voted for everything that is left.

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dandy*
post 5th May 2024, 10:09 PM
Post #223
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Mansonette
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Twist and Shout is way too high for me. It’s really not my type of thing at all.

I Want to Hold Your Hand is definitely one of their best early singles, I felt it was quite a step up when I listened to vote.
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Chez Wombat
post 5th May 2024, 11:14 PM
Post #224
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Their early material isn't on the same level of their experimental stuff, but I Want To Hold Your Hand is probably my favourite of them, a very timeless song. The German version bangs too x
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Popchartfreak
post 6th May 2024, 08:48 AM
Post #225
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Day Tripper is great but always preferred t'other side, while I want To Hold Your Head was one dad bought so I grew up with it - in the US this was the monster biggest-selling frenzy-causing scene-changing iconic pop culture moment of 1960's US history, so it's only right it should be the highest-charting of the early stuff.
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Popchartfreak
post 6th May 2024, 08:51 AM
Post #226
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Twist & Shout, though, was huge at the time thanks to EP's getting treated like singles and along with Let's Twist Again spearheaded that dance-obsession that gripped the UK in 1962/3. John's vocals are amazing and lift the recording up from great to classic.
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JulianT
post 6th May 2024, 12:01 PM
Post #227
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22nd: 405 points
Across The Universe




JulianT 48
King Rollo 47
Brer 44
Jade 40
Chez Wombat 37
Notorious D.O.T. 35
popchartfreak 27
danG 27
dandy* 27
WhoOdyssey 22
Bjork 17
gooddelta 10
Roba. 9
ben08 7
…ready for it 5
jimwatts 3
Severin 0
steve201 0

This is included on “Let It Be”, though the first version of it appeared on a 1969 compilation album. It was considered by John to be one of his lyrically best and most poetic ballads. It was influenced by Transcendental Meditation, and the Sanskrit phrase “Jai guru deva om” loosely translates as “all hail the divine guru”. In 2008 NASA transmitted the song as an interstellar message in the direction of Polaris.

As a heavy daydreamer this has been a big favourite for me both as a child and an adult. Chartjack2’s 48 points from the last part would have carried it into the Top 20 but alas it falls just shy.

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JulianT
post 6th May 2024, 04:37 PM
Post #228
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21st: 415 points
I Am The Walrus




King Rollo 44
popchartfreak 41
Notorious D.O.T. 40
Brer 39
Jade 38
dandy* 37
JulianT 35
Chez Wombat 31
Severin 29
jimwatts 23
danG 18
Steve201 15
…ready for it 10
gooddelta 9
WhoOdyssey 6
Bjork 0
ben08 0
Roba. 0

This was written by John and included on the “Magical Mystery Tour EP” and the film of the same name. He was partly inspired by Lewis Carroll’s similarly nonsensical poem “The Walrus And The Carpenter” in writing this.

Here it’s the highest placed song from the EP which peaked at #2 in the UK, and it was held off by “Hello Goodbye” which had “I Am The Walrus” as its B side, meaning that it had the unique honour of featuring in the UK #1 and #2 simultaneously.

This would also have been in the Top 20 had chartjack2’s votes counted.
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JulianT
post 6th May 2024, 04:52 PM
Post #229
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(1962-1966 Disc 1)
1. Love Me Do
2. Please Please Me
3. I Saw Her Standing There
4. Twist And Shout
5. From Me To You
6. She Loves You
7. I Want To Hold Your Hand
8. This Boy
9. All My Loving
10. Roll Over Beethoven
11. You Really Got A Hold On Me
12. Can’t Buy Me Love
13. You Can’t Do That

14. A Hard Day’s Night
15. And I Love Her
16. Eight Days A Week
17. I Feel Fine

18. Ticket To Ride
19. Yesterday


(1962-1966 Disc 2)
20. Help!
21. You’ve Got To Hide Your Love Away
22. We Can Work It Out
23. Day Tripper
24. Drive My Car

25. Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)
26. Nowhere Man
27. Michelle

28. In My Life
29. If I Needed Someone
30. Girl

31. Paperback Writer
32. Eleanor Rigby

33. Yellow Submarine
34. Taxman
35. Got To Get You Into My Life
36. I’m Only Sleeping
37. Here, There And Everywhere

38. Tomorrow Never Knows

(1967-1970 Disc 1)
39. Strawberry Fields Forever
40. Penny Lane

41. Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
42. With A Little Help From My Friends

43. Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds
44. Within You Without You
45. A Day In The Life
46. All You Need Is Love
47. I Am The Walrus
48. Hello, Goodbye
49. The Fool On The Hill
50. Magical Mystery Tour
51. Lady Madonna

52. Hey Jude
53. Revolution

(1967-1970 Disc 2)
54. Back In The U.S.S.R.
55. Dear Prudence

56. While My Guitar Gently Weeps
57. Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da
58. Glass Onion
59. Blackbird
60. Hey Bulldog
61. Get Back
62. Don’t Let Me Down
63. The Ballad of John and Yoko
64. Old Brown Shoe

65. Here Comes The Sun
66. Come Together
67. Something

68. Octopus’s Garden
69. Oh! Darling
70. I Want You (She’s So Heavy)

71. Let It Be
72. Across The Universe
73. I Me Mine
74. The Long And Winding Road
75. Now And Then


90s Top 10 hits:
76. Baby It’s You
77. Free As A Bird
78. Real Love
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JulianT
post 6th May 2024, 05:07 PM
Post #230
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Points left to give /1,275:

1 (4) danG 713
2 (2) Chez Wombat 709
3= (1) Roba. 693
3= (6) Jade 693
5 (7) JulianT 683
6 (9) Brer 663
7 (8) gooddelta 648
8 (3) steve201 644
9 (13) dandy* 619
10 (15) Notorious D.O.T. 607

11 (11) King Rollo 598
12 (12) Bjork 585
13 (14) jimwatts 574
14 (5) Severin 569
15= (9) ben08 530
15= (16) popchartfreak 530
17 (18) WhoOdyssey 406
18 (17) …ready for it 399

And chartjack2 would have 563 at this point (ignoring the fact that the Top 20 would have been different). smile.gif
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Roba.
post 7th May 2024, 03:36 PM
Post #231
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Slid off from the top now. Expected lol.

Glad a lot of my high pointers still in and making top 20 but not a surprise most of them!
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ben08
post 7th May 2024, 03:42 PM
Post #232
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QUOTE
... the EP which peaked at #2 in the UK ...

This EP did make no. 1 in the DISC magazine singles chart and in the Melody Maker chart.
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JulianT
post 7th May 2024, 05:50 PM
Post #233
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20th: 418 points
Paperback Writer




Chart run: 2-{1}-1-2-7-14-19-21-30-40-50->11

WhoOdyssey 46
dandy* 46
Roba. 42
Brer 42
…ready for it 34
steve201 29
Jade 28
Severin 26
Notorious D.O.T. 24
goodelta 23
jimwatts 22
JulianT 19
Chez Wombat 17
King Rollo 11
danG 8
popchartfreak 1
Bjork 0
ben08 0

This was largely a Paul written song and their 10th consecutive UK #1 from an official release in 1966. It was the last new song to be featured on their final tour.

The song is notable for the opening statement where the voices come in one by one in harmony, and the boosted bass guitar sound. It also sees them moving into more diverse lyrical subject matters, and Paul apparently based it on a letter he had received from a budding novelist.
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Roba.
post 7th May 2024, 07:16 PM
Post #234
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'Paperback Writer' a great start to the top 20 happy.gif
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JulianT
post 7th May 2024, 09:03 PM
Post #235
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19th: 422 points
Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)




Severin 49
Jade 48
dandy* 41
JulianT 41
danG 40
steve201 40
Brer 35
jimwatts 32
popchartfreak 29
Notorious D.O.T. 19
Chez Wombat 16
King Rollo 13
Bjork 8
ben08 8
gooddelta 3
…ready for it 0
Roba. 0
WhoOdyssey 0

This was mainly written by John with contributions from Paul, and appears on “Rubber Soul”. The introspective lyrics were Dylan inspired, and the sitar part played by George was the first appearance of that instrument on a Western recording and marked the beginning of the group’s and especially George’s association with Indian classical music. It topped the Australian charts when released as a single with “Nowhere Man”.

I love the gentle simplicity of this, both with the straightforward repeated tune and the delightfully mundane lyrics, and it’s surely up there with the group’s finest ballads. It has done very well here especially with its top end votes, receiving half a dozen scores of 40 or more and 2 podium scores.


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dandy*
post 7th May 2024, 09:07 PM
Post #236
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Mansonette
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Two of my top 10 falling sad.gif

Love Norwegian Wood - although I should confess that the first time I heard the song was the PM Dawn cover version on their Bliss Album :hide:

Paperback Writer gone far too early even though it did make top 20. It's just really distinctive with the guitar lines and harmonies, one of my absolute favourites of theirs.
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WhoOdyssey
post 7th May 2024, 09:15 PM
Post #237
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Huh, I quite like 'Norwegian Wood' and thought I'd given it some points! It must have slipped my mind.
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JulianT
post 8th May 2024, 01:01 PM
Post #238
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18th: 430 points
We Can Work It Out




WhoOdyssey 43
JulianT 42
dandy* 40
Chez Wombat 35
danG 30
Brer 30
popchartfreak 26
King Rollo 24
…ready for it 21
steve201 21
Notorious D.O.T. 21
jimwatts 19
Roba. 17
ben08 16
gooddelta 14
Jade 12
Bjork 12
Severin 7

Like its double A side single twin “Day Tripper” this was recorded during the “Rubber Soul” sessions but not included on the album. The double A side was the 7th biggest selling single of the 1960s in the UK and The Beatles’ 5th highest after “She Loves You”, “I Want To Hold Your Hand”, “Can’t Buy Me Love” and “I Feel Fine”. “Hey Jude” is now the only pure million seller remaining in the rate.

Paul is thought to have written the song about his relationship with Jane Asher. However John wrote the “Life is very short…” bridge section which might be seen to contrast with Paul’s optimistic message.

This is the highest of the 5 Christmas #1 tracks and the first song to have received points from all 18 voters, something which even some of the very top tracks didn’t achieve as we’ll see.
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Popchartfreak
post 8th May 2024, 04:35 PM
Post #239
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All classic tracks there, love I Am The Walrus especially, but am surprised at Paperback Writer being so popular - at the time it was far and away the least-known song of their 60's hits, I genuinely don't recall hearing it at all until the 70's when it was used as the theme tune to Read All About It book review show, whereas I knew all of the other Beatles singles bar Strawberry Fields (little airplay) and Come Together (Something got the all the fame). In 1976, though, it was the 5th best-selling Beatles single behind Yesterday (top 10), Hey Jude (12), Back In The USSR (top 20), and Get Back (top 30).

Nearly 50 years on, here at least it beats 2 of those singles - but drops behind some others. For info, Strawberry Fields was top 40 (Penny lane not listed) and a bunch of others were in the 51-75 range had they been publishing charts that long then.
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JulianT
post 8th May 2024, 06:16 PM
Post #240
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17th: 440 points
A Hard Day’s Night




Chart run: 3-{1}-1-1-2-2-5-6-10-15-19-24-28->13

…ready for it 45
Severin 43
steve201 38
gooddelta 37
ben08 36
Brer 31
WhoOdyssey 30
Roba. 28
Bjork 26
danG 22
King Rollo 21
popchartfreak 19
Jade 16
dandy* 15
JulianT 15
Notorious D.O.T. 11
Chez Wombat 7
jimwatts 0

This was a John written song as well as the title track of both their 3rd studio album and their 1st feature film. It was the first time that both a single and album by the same artist topped both the UK and US charts. Peter Sellers reached the UK Top 20 in 1965 with a comic spoken cover version.

The opening chord, played by George on a Rickenbacker 12 string guitar, is one of the most discussed song openings of all time, and the closing instrumental part is also much discussed and inspired bands such as The Byrds. For me the single represents a significant step forward from the band from catchy unchallenging pop-rock to something much more adventurous.
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